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Two
economic reports released last week, the November ISM non-manufacturing
survey and the November employment report, were interpreted by some that
the overall economy was doing just fine and that there was no need for
the Fed to consider cutting the funds rate. I respectfully disagree.
Growth in the goods-producing sectors of the economy – manufacturing,
mining and construction -- has weakened significantly. And it is in the
goods producing sectors where the action always shows up first at
cyclical turning points.
Some
might respond that I’m living in the past. Don’t the goods-producing
sectors account for a much smaller share of real GDP than they used to?
Actually, no. As shown in Chart 1, the combined output of goods and
construction activity in 2005 represented 44.6% of real GDP. (I picked
up this nugget of information from Joe Carson of Alliance Bernstein via
a Bloomberg News column by Caroline Baum.) This is above both the
average and median percentages of 43.3% and 43.4%, respectively, for the
period 1950 through 2005. Back in 1999, the goods-producing sectors also
accounted for 44.6% of real GDP. But you would then have to go all the
way back to 1965 to find a percentage this high. So, although the
service-providing industries combined make the largest contribution to
real GDP, this is as it has been for the past 55 years. Moreover, the
goods-producing sectors are now making a comeback.
Chart
1

In
terms of cyclicality, it is variability that matters, not size. Just
eyeballing Chart 2 you can see that the year-to-year variation in the
goods-producing sectors is larger than in the service-providing
industries. But in case your eyesight is failing you, the standard
deviation, a statistical measure of variability, of the year-to-year
percent change in real goods-producing output was 3.8 from 1955 through
2005 vs. only 1.2 for service-providing output. Also notice that from
1955 through 2005 there has never been a year in which the change in the
output of services was negative on an annual basis. Again, it is in the
goods-producing sectors of the economy where the cyclical action is.
Chart
2

Growth
in the goods-producing sectors has slowed significantly. Chart 3
shows that the quarter-to-quarter annualized growth in combined
real output of goods and structures slowed to 1.7% in the third
quarter, the slowest growth since the fourth quarter 2002. Notice
that in the second half of 2000, the goods-producing sectors gave
up the ghost but the service-providing sectors kept chugging
along. The recession in 2001 was heralded by the weakness in the
goods-producing sectors, not
the service-providing sectors.
Chart
3

In
its November survey, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM)
reported that its index for manufacturing new orders fell to 48.7,
the first time the index had visited sub-50 territory since April
2003 (see Chart 4). In contrast, the ISM index for non-manufacturing
new orders increased in November, remaining well above the 50
level. Again, notice that back in 2000, the ISM manufacturing new
orders index was diving below 50, but the non-manufacturing index
did not dip below 50 until the 2001 recession had begun. I
remember back in 2000, when the ISM manufacturing surveys were
sending out a cyclical warning signal, the conventional wisdom was
that the ISM manufacturing survey was “old economy”
information, no longer relevant to the “new economy” we now
had entered. The cyclical warning signal being sent by the
negative spread between the yield on the Treasury 10-year security
and the fed funds rate also was brushed off with the five most
dangerous words in economic forecasting: “It is different this
time.”
Chart
4

This
brings us to the November employment report. Payrolls in
service-providing industries increased 172,000 whereas payrolls in
goods-producing industries fell
40,000. November marked the third consecutive month in which
payrolls in the goods-producing industries fell and the fourth
decline in the past five months. Year-to-date in 2006, employment
in the goods producing industries is up 38,000. This is much
smaller than the 271,000 increase in the first 11 months of 2005.
In contrast, in service-providing industries, employment is up
1.607 million year-to-date in 2006 vs. 1.588 million in the first
11 months of 2005. Does this stronger employment performance in
the service-providing industries indicate that there is no reason
to be concerned about a significant cyclical slowing in economic
growth? An examination of Chart 5 would suggest that the sharp
slowdown in employment growth in the goods-producing industries,
0.12% year-over-year in November, vs. the steady year-over-year
employment growth of 1.56% in the service-providing industries is
nothing to be sanguine about. As illustrated in the chart, there
is greater cyclical employment variation in the goods-producing
industries and employment in these industries tends to weaken
sharply just before recessions. In contrast, employment growth in
the service-providing industries tends to hold up reasonably well
until the recession occurs.
Chart
5

In
sum, in trying to divine the cyclical course of the economy,
don’t ignore the behavior of the goods-producing sector – a
sector whose output accounts for 45% of real GDP and the sector
that historically has exhibited the most cyclical variability.
*Paul
Kasriel is the recipient of the 2006 Lawrence R. Klein Award
for Blue Chip Forecasting Accuracy

© 2006 Paul L. Kasriel
Editorial Archive
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Paul
L. Kasriel
Sr.
Vice President & Director of Economic Research
The Northern Trust Company
50 S. LaSalle Street
Chicago, IL USA
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